Answer:
To persuade you that online relationships are different from offline ones (d)
Explanation:
just took the test
<span>I believe the correct answer is;
</span>But sometimes (like right now), as I sit in the cool, green-draped parlor, the grindstone begins to turn, and time with all its changes is ground away—and I remember Doodle.
<span>
But another good one is
</span><span>
</span>There is within me (and with sadness I have watched it in others) a knot of cruelty borne by the stream of love, much as our blood sometimes bears the seed of our destruction, and at times I was mean to doodle.
Answer:
Explanation:
<u>Tanka poems always have a structure, but not the rhyme.</u>
They follow the pattern of syllables which goes like this:
- line - 5 syllables
- line - 7 syllables
- line - 5 syllables
- line - 7 syllables
- line - 7 syllables
It is very similar to haiku, but a bit longer and more elaborate. It also uses metaphors and allusions, and no punctuation.
<u>Even when translated on English it doesn't seem to us tanka has a structured form, we must know that on the original Japanese version it is structured with the model showed above.</u>
Whom is the answer to that blank